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Monday
Sep202010

Hope for Bali’s Remote Hamlets


Hope for Bali’s Remote Hamlets
Report Lisa Siregar | September 20, 2010

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Life is simple, but definitely not easy, for the residents of Cegi and Pengalusan, two of the most isolated hamlets in Ban village in East Bali.

Ban consists of 15 hamlets that stretch for more than 7,000 hectares up the slopes of Agung and Abang mountains. Cegi and Pengalusan are the closest to Agung’s crater.

Residents of the hamlets live among a harsh mountainous landscape, linked to the other hamlets by a series of narrow dirt tracks.

Daily life in the hamlets stands in stark contrast to the modern and glamorous sun-kissed existence around the beach communities of Kuta, Legian and Seminyak.

For decades, the forgotten residents of Cegi and Pengalusan survived without ready access to clean water, markets or health and education facilities. And until recently, leaving the hamlets meant a lengthy walk just to reach the nearest paved road.

Ineh Radiasa, who lives in Pengalusan hamlet, said that the lack of ready access to basic necessities meant that many of the children living in the remote hamlet were illiterate and suffered from high rates of malnutrition.

“The closest Puskesmas [community health center] is about a three-hour walk away, so when someone is sick, we carry them together and walk there,” she said.

However, life is looking up for residents. Last month saw the completion of an asphalt road connecting the two hamlets to the others, making their area reachable by motorized vehicles.

“Before there was a road it was such hard work just to be able to get here,” said Ni Luh Toni Parwati, head of the Puskesmas in the town of Kubu. “Whenever I climbed up here, I always got a stomachache.”

She regularly made the arduous trek to the hamlets to run a posyandu, a monthly health check-up booth.

The new road is the welcome result of efforts by the East Bali Poverty Project, a nonprofit organization founded by an Englishman named David Booth in 1998.

The foundation helps underprivileged people to improve their situations by educating them about sanitation, nutrition and farming techniques. The educational aspect is key, as stated in Booth’s overriding principle: “No money, no gifts, only knowledge.”

Booth said that he started the East Bali Poverty Project to help the residents help themselves. So far, the project has helped to improve the lives of some 3,000 families around Ban village.

“You don’t just give help to people and then leave,” Booth said. “That is immoral.”

Booth said he had traveled to 45 countries and seen some of their poorest, most isolated areas. But he said that none were as difficult to provide aid to as Ban.

According to Booth, overall health conditions in the village were very poor, with little basic sanitation. Parents needed to be told to keep their children from accidentally eating animal feces.

And before attending health classes that the foundation offered, some villagers neglected washing their clothes and had never properly brushed their teeth.

Booth said he first stumbled on the remote area in the early 1990s. According to him, the existence of the far-flung communities was unknown to the government at that time.

But even though their village is isolated and offers few creature comforts, Booth discovered a group of people who are tied to the land and reluctant to leave.

“We were born here, our ancestors are here and our temple is here,” said Nyoman, a resident of Pengalusan.

It is hard to believe that the residents live just a short drive from some of the world’s most attractive tourist destinations. Their daily life reflects the simplicity of their surroundings.

Many women earn a living by making and selling plaited rattan baskets.

Another common way to earn money is through raising cows, and every day, large groups of men and children walk into the forest to scythe grass to feed their livestock.

Leading such a spartan existence, basic activities such as record-keeping were never practiced When the foundation members began offering educational programs for the children, they had trouble sorting them based on their ages.

“We had to guess the children’s ages,” Booth said. “No one knows, there was no record and documentation never was important.”

Booth created his own textbook to help educated the villagers. The book, titled “The Art of Learning by Doing,” is a bilingual guidebook specifically aimed at the people of East Bali.

Among its chapters are lessons on health, hygiene, farming and art. It even covers extracurricular activities such as martial arts and yoga.

Villagers said their lives had improved since East Bali Poverty Project began working in the area.

“Our neighborhood used to be dirty, there was trash everywhere and our houses were broken,” Ineh said. “It was before Pak David taught us to clean up.”

Booth runs his foundation with donations from dozens of sources including corporations, schools and individuals. His own dedication to helping the poor stems from his own experience of growing up poor.

He said that his family was so poor that his parents were uneasy about their son going to university. In 2004, Booth was named a Member of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire for his charitable work.

From donations, the foundation has been able to build much-needed infrastructure around Ban, such as toilets and an art center for the students.

Now, children and teens living in the village are able to dream bigger.

Ketut Tangkil and Komang Simpen are both 17 and taking a government-approved education program equivalent to high school. They said they wanted to contribute to their village when they grew up.

Ketut wants to be a math teacher and Komang wants to be the first dentist in his hamlet. “Seeing people help us makes me want to help others,” Komang said.

Monday
Sep202010

Bali Police Still Unraveling Case Involving Stolen Sacred Objects

Bali Police Still Unraveling Case Involving Stolen Sacred Objects

 

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Made Arya Kencana | September 20, 2010

I Gusti Ngurah Sudiana, from the Hindu Dharma Association of Bali, left, and Bali Police spokesman I Gde Sugianyar, right, inspecting sacred Hindu objects allegedly stolen by a syndicate operating on the island. Six Balinese and an Italian have been arrested. (JG Photo/JP Christo) I Gusti Ngurah Sudiana, from the Hindu Dharma Association of Bali, left, and Bali Police spokesman I Gde Sugianyar, right, inspecting sacred Hindu objects allegedly stolen by a syndicate operating on the island. Six Balinese and an Italian have been arrested. (JG Photo/JP Christo)


 

Denpasar. Bali is known for sun, sand and five-star resorts. Apparently, you can now add to that list international syndicates dealing in stolen sacred objects.

Police on the island have already arrested six Balinese and one foreigner on charges of dealing in sacred objects thought to have been stolen from the hundreds of temples that dot Bali.

They have recovered hundreds of pieces believed to have been stolen, and have also contacted Interpol to help track down any objects that may have already been transported off the island.

Bali detective Adj. Comr. Benny Murjianto said on Monday that police had arrested five Balinese on charges of stealing the sacred objects.

They have been identified as I Komang Oka Sukaya, Gusti Putu Oka, Wayan Eka Putra, Komang Gede Pariana and I Gusti Komang Suardika.

Another Balinese, I Gusti Lanang Sidemen, and Italian national Roberto Gamba have been arrested on suspicion of buying the stolen items.

Benny said Gamba had planned to sell the sacred objects overseas. “We are still investigating where he planned to sell the sacred objects.”

He said the group had operated in Badung, Gianyar and Karangasem districts, and that police had received 29 reports of thefts involving sacred objects from these districts.

Police have recovered 23 sacred items, known as pratima, and hundreds of ritual objects made of silver. Gamba allegedly bought the objects for between Rp 250,000 and Rp 7 million ($30 to $780) each, depending on the age and design.

Police also seized one car, two motorcycles and two cellular phones from the suspects. “The police also confiscated Roberto’s laptop to try to track the trade network,” Benny said.

Meanwhile, an emotional Gamba, who was presented to the press with the other suspects, denied all of the charges. He said he had no idea the objects he bought were stolen.

“I did not know they were stolen goods, and I had no knowledge at all that they were also sacral objects. I only bought them from an art shop,” he said.

“I don’t understand why I am being arrested.” Ngurah Sudiana, head of the Bali chapter of the Hindu Dharma Indonesian Community, said the suspects deserved long jail sentences if convicted.

“The material losses are insubstantial compared to what the Hindu community feels over the theft of the pratimas by this gang,” Sudiana said.



Friday
Sep172010

US, Indonesia Hold First Meeting of Joint Commission

Photo: ASSOCIATED PRESS

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton gestures while chairing the first US Indonesian Joint Commission meeting, with Indonesian Foreign Minister Marty Natalegawa, Friday, Sept. 17, 2010, at the State Department in Washington.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and her Indonesian counterpart Marty Natalegawa met Friday at the State Department for the inaugural meeting of the U.S.-Indonesia Joint Commission.  

Members of the U.S. and Indonesian delegations sat around tables set up in a "U" shape formation at the State Department Friday.   Clinton and Natalegawa sat in the center, where they presided over this first meeting.  

Clinton called Indonesia a "great bilateral partner" as well as a leader on multiple issues.  She said the U.S. and Indonesia have made much progress in the 18 months since their presidents agreed to forge a comprehensive partnership based on shared values and interests.

"We are both diverse societies with traditions of pluralism, tolerance, respect for the rights of women and minorities. We share an abiding interest in a more prosperous Southeast Asia and a more peaceful world. And we applaud the role that Indonesia is playing, not only as an advocate for democracy around the world, but on the environment, on climate change, on so many other critical issues," she said.

In fact, the Joint Commission established working groups to focus on six main issues: democracy, the environment, security, energy, education, and trade and investment.  

The U.S. Secretary of State said she is particularly excited about education initiatives. "We will work together to increase the number of Indonesian students studying in the United States and the number of American students studying in Indonesia. We are taking steps that will eventually double our bilateral trade, including a $1 billion dollar credit commitment from the U.S. Export-Import Bank, in partnership with 11 Indonesian banks," she said.

Indonesian Foreign Minister Natalegawa said the phrase "comprehensive partnership" sums up the current relationship between the U.S. and Indonesia, which are two of the largest democracies in the world.

"I am very keen to ensure that on education as well in other areas as well - trade and investment, energy, climate change and environment - we make steady progress and even urgent progress to ensure that we really deliver in making, in giving substance to our comprehensive partnership," he said.

Speaking at the conclusion of the inaugural meeting, Clinton and Natalegawa emphasized the importance of concrete developments.  Clinton said she particularly liked Natalegawa's suggestion that the two sides begin a score card so they can closely track the progress of the delegations.

Both diplomats also spoke about their nations' commitments to religious tolerance.  Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim nation.

The joint commission is set to meet next in Indonesia in 2011.

 
 

 
Find this article at:
http://www.voanews.com/english/news/asia/US-Indonesia-Hold-First-Meeting-of-Joint-Commission-103172389.html



Wednesday
Sep152010

1000 yr old human skulls seized from a collector in Bali

human skulls seized from a collector by the police Badung, Bali, each estimated to have 1000 years old.
Police confiscated Resort Badung, Bali, proved a valuable ancient relics. Two human skulls seized from a collector by the police Badung, Bali, each estimated to have 1000 years old.

"Based on the investigation team of researchers from the Institute for Archaeology and the Institute for Preservation of Archaeological Heritage (BP3) Denpasar, the two skulls that we now secure the thousand-year-old was expected," said Chief of Police Criminal Investigation Unit Adjunct Badung Police Commissioner Soma Adnyana in Badung, Tuesday (14 / 9).
He said the research team estimates that these two human skulls which officers seized from a villa in the area of Beach Road Berawa, Badung regency was aged around 1000 years. In addition to his age they have encountered "old", the second skull was known from the Mongoloid race.
However, to further verify it, a team from the Institute for Archaeology and the Institute for Preservation of Archaeological Heritage (BP3) Denpasar still researching more information on the two skulls that are already decorated. Furthermore Adnyana Soma said, from the results of the examination while the owner of the skull, Pascal Morabito, claimed that the skull was bought from one of the museums belonging to someone in France.
"He denies that his antiques were to be traded. He was admitted only as a collector," says Soma Adnyana. Owner tenggkorak that French citizens were also admitted that the collection of goods were brought from France in 2009 by using containers.
According to the police who examined dokomen owned by Pascal Morabito, the goods are not equipped with certificates, but only a letter from the museum in France. According to Soma Adnyana, when will the results of the study meets the element is considered a violation, the owner may be seized by the Law No. 5 / 1990 on Conservation of Biological Resources and Ecosystems.
FYI, The Badung district police officers, raided last Monday and found a human skull, a turtle and snake skin that has been preserved in a villa on Beach Road Berawa, Badung. As well as in a dorm room at Western Road Teuku Umar, Denpasar.
Two skulls found at the villa owned by Pascal Morabito, who claims to come from Papua New Guinea. While from a boarding-house searches in the area Teuku Umar Street, officers found 10 turtles which have been preserved, snake skin, as well as antique ceramics.



Wednesday
Sep152010

Liquid Perfection: Why Surfers Love Bali 

Liquid Perfection: Why Surfers Love Bali  http://surfermag.com/photos/flash/bali_changes_seasons/

Bali Changes Seasons; Photos and Captions by Jason Childs

A great slideshow of surfing in Bali.